This paper discusses a recentralization of spatial planning in Australia since 2000, during which Labor governments have been predominant. The new planning initiatives have primarily reflected an imperative to improve capital city competitiveness and development levels in general. A second driver has been a desire to make development more ecologically sustainable. The paper demonstrates this recentralization in state plans, state infrastructure strategies, metropolitan and regional strategies, new specific purpose authorities, development control system changes, and Commonwealth government intervention. While the fluid and dynamic nature of these changes resonate with UK planning characterized by ‘soft spaces and fuzzy boundaries’, they hav...
This chapter concerns regions, regionalization and regionalism in urban and regional planning in Aus...
Despite recent resource booms, the Australian economy remains dominated by the urban. In the wake of...
All public policy making and service delivery is spatial, meaning that there is an inevitable and di...
Most Australian State Governments are embarking on a second stage of neo-liberal planning system cha...
Although primary responsibility for urban planning rests with the Australian states and territories,...
There are many calls for urban planning in Australia to be reformed, although often in contradictory...
Although primary responsibility for urban planning rests with the Australian states and territories,...
There are many calls for urban planning in Australia to be reformed, although often in contradictor...
This paper argues that a recent resurgence in Australian spatial planning has been superseded by a r...
This paper argues that a recent resurgence in Australian spatial planning has been superseded by a r...
Using the conceptual frameworks of the ‘mobility turn’, ‘relational regions’ and de/reterritorializa...
Regional planning, regional policy and regional governance are contentious topics. There is debate a...
Perth and Brisbane are both subject to new state government office decentralisation policies. Unlike...
This paper looks at the classic shift in planning culture from technocratic modernism to market-base...
The South Australian system is currently undergoing a major review. Officially this is prompted by t...
This chapter concerns regions, regionalization and regionalism in urban and regional planning in Aus...
Despite recent resource booms, the Australian economy remains dominated by the urban. In the wake of...
All public policy making and service delivery is spatial, meaning that there is an inevitable and di...
Most Australian State Governments are embarking on a second stage of neo-liberal planning system cha...
Although primary responsibility for urban planning rests with the Australian states and territories,...
There are many calls for urban planning in Australia to be reformed, although often in contradictory...
Although primary responsibility for urban planning rests with the Australian states and territories,...
There are many calls for urban planning in Australia to be reformed, although often in contradictor...
This paper argues that a recent resurgence in Australian spatial planning has been superseded by a r...
This paper argues that a recent resurgence in Australian spatial planning has been superseded by a r...
Using the conceptual frameworks of the ‘mobility turn’, ‘relational regions’ and de/reterritorializa...
Regional planning, regional policy and regional governance are contentious topics. There is debate a...
Perth and Brisbane are both subject to new state government office decentralisation policies. Unlike...
This paper looks at the classic shift in planning culture from technocratic modernism to market-base...
The South Australian system is currently undergoing a major review. Officially this is prompted by t...
This chapter concerns regions, regionalization and regionalism in urban and regional planning in Aus...
Despite recent resource booms, the Australian economy remains dominated by the urban. In the wake of...
All public policy making and service delivery is spatial, meaning that there is an inevitable and di...